As much as I do not like Don Imus, I do think freedom of speech is being violated here. I have heard black ("African-Americans") make derogatory comments about white peoplewith no repercussions. If you don't like someone's speech, don't listen to them.
Imus can say what he pleases. However, when you are saying it on a station that has owners who have advertizers and an audience, someone has to be responsible.
In my opinion he has the right to freedom of speech. As ignorant as it was to to say what he did, nobody is being forced to listen. This has not been the first time he has voiced offending comments but for some reason this is getting overwhelming attention. He IS a "shock jock" isn't he? I agree that those comments were out of line and IF I listened to him in the first place I probably would not anymore if I were so offended. Should he be punished? I think he has punished himself. Change the channel if you don't like what you see and hear, it is your choice!Sexism and raceism are nothing like they used to be in the U.S. and I believe that trend will continue with or without Mr. Don Imus on the airwaves.
Two words: Shock jock!
I happen to love Snoop Dogg but I had to post this in case not everyone saw it.Snoop Dogg: Don't Compare Me To 'This Punk' Don ImusPosted by Tim Graham on April 11, 2007 - 17:19. On the Imus vs. Rappers front, MTV News reports that rap star Snoop Dogg has issued a new "warning" to the public: Don't dare to compare his lyrics — or any other MC's — to Don Imus and his recent racially inflammatory comments. MTV says "the Dogg" found there is no parallel. The Rutgers women Imus ridiculed were a success story, while the women he knocks in his music are "ho's that's in the hood that ain't doing sh--."MTV transmitted a long, profane self-defense Snoop offered in a phone interview: "It's a completely different scenario," said Snoop, barking over the phone from a hotel room in L.A. "[Rappers] are not talking about no collegiate basketball girls who have made it to the next level in education and sports. We're talking about ho's that's in the 'hood that ain't doing sh--, that's trying to get a n---a for his money. These are two separate things. First of all, we ain't no old-ass white men that sit up on MSNBC [the cable network home to Imus] going hard on black girls. We are rappers that have these songs coming from our minds and our souls that are relevant to what we feel. I will not let them mutha-----as say we in the same league as him." Snoop Dogg insisted "this punk" Imus deserved much more than a two-week suspension. He deserved to be fired. He should at least be punished like the NFL suspended Tennessee Titans football player Adam Jones for an entire season for scrapes with the police: "Kick him off the air forever," he said. "Ban him like they did [Adam] 'Pacman' Jones. They kicked him out the [National Football] League for the whole season [for numerous violations of the NFL's personal-conduct policy, including multiple arrests], but this punk gets to get on the air and call black women 'nappy-headed ho's.' " Can there be a plainer picture of a double standard?
No doubt what Imus did was distasteful.The biggest joke is you got two racists like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson calling for Imus to be fired.The hypocrisy from them two for their own past racist remarks to the comments they made about the boys in the Duke rape case makes what they want a joke.Maybe those two ought to be serving up an apology to those boys and then resign from their own respective positions first before spewing their asinine bs.IMO it seems those two see the writing on the wall in the Duke case coming down the pipe and this gave them the perfect timing to try to get everyones mind of the bs they pulled in that case.